Khaleej Times

Syrian rebels pull out heavy arms from Idlib

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al eis (Syria) — The young dustcovere­d rebel looked out warily from a dirt trench facing opposing regime forces as his unit pulled heavy weapons from a planned buffer zone in northern Syria.

Squinting in the sun, he watched over the vast agricultur­al fields and web of dirt roads straddling opposition and government territory.

In the coming days, this area will see the establishm­ent of a demilitari­sed zone meant to avert a massive regime assault on the Idlib region, the last major rebel bastion in Syria.

Under a deal reached last month by rebel backer Turkey and regime ally Russia, the U-shaped zone ringing Idlib would be free of heavy weapons and militants by October 15.

On Monday, Turkish state news agency Anadolu said Syrian rebels had finished withdrawin­g their heavy arms from the zone.

It took them just a few days. The National Liberation Front (NLF), the main Ankara-backed rebel alliance in Idlib, had started removing weapons at the weekend.

No tanks or rocket launchers could be seen at the NLF’s position on the Al Eis hilltop, in the westernmos­t part of Aleppo province near Idlib.

An older, bearded NLF commander walked through the maze of trenches in plastic sandals, a mustard-coloured scarf wrapping his head and a Kalashniko­v swung across his back. Rusted barrels and loose cinderbloc­ks littered the upper lip of the trenches, providing added protection.

Another younger fighter scrambled into a tunnel dug into the hilltop and reinforced with sandbags and corrugated metal. “Pulling the heavy weapons will not affect our positions. We are continuing to reinforce and bolster them,” NLF commander Abu Walid told AFP.

“Our instructio­ns are to remain in these areas and not retreat until the last drop of blood.” Government forces are stationed just five kilometres away in the town of Al Hader, but the front is calm.

The two areas are connected by a trade checkpoint, and trucks of goods can be seen moving back and forth on the dusty road. As the

Pulling the heavy weapons will not affect our positions. We are continuing to reinforce and bolster them Abu Walid,

NLF commander

deadline to establish the buffer zone nears, rebel ally Turkey has dispatched convoys of personnel carriers and troops into Syria on a near-weekly basis.

It already operates more than a dozen monitoring posts around Idlib and Aleppo, and analysts expect the new deliveries to be distribute­d along what would become a “first line of defence” for opposition areas.

“The entry of Turkish forces to these well-known positions is strengthen­ing day after day,” said Abu Walid. —

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 ?? AFP ?? Syrian rebel-fighters take position in a trench armed with an automatic rifle on a hill in the area of Aleis in the southwest of Aleppo province. —
AFP Syrian rebel-fighters take position in a trench armed with an automatic rifle on a hill in the area of Aleis in the southwest of Aleppo province. —

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